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Viagra helps mountain climbers:
Popular
drug helps with a different kind of performance
By Valerie Reitman, Los Angeles Times
September
13, 2004
Researchers may have found a new use for
Viagra, after conducting tests on mountain climbers scaling Mount
Everest, the world's highest summit.
The drug, which
promotes erections by opening the tiny veins and arteries leading to
the penis, performs similarly in the lungs of men and women at high
altitudes, a new study has found.
German medical researchers
reported that sildenafil (the generic name for Viagra) enabled 14
experienced Swiss and German climbers to better tolerate hypoxia, or
lack of oxygen, while scaling the Himalayan peak. Hypoxia causes
altitude sickness and hinders exercise by constricting lung blood
vessels, as well as triggering other changes in the heart and lungs.
The drug is believed to be the first shown to increase
exercise capacity during severe hypoxia at high altitudes. The
researchers also found that it had a similar effect at sea level,
where hypoxia-like conditions were induced on volunteers to produce
an effect akin to what is experienced by patients suffering from
lung disease or obstructions.
The study results, published
in the August issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine, could have
wide implications, not only for mountain climbers and athletes
working out in higher altitudes but also for patients suffering from
lung diseases as well as pulmonary hypertension, Dr. Hossein A.
Ghofrani, assistant professor at the University of Giessen in
Germany and research team co-leader, said in a phone interview.
It could potentially also be seen as a performance-enhancer
in competitive as well as noncompetitive sports, although it remains
to be seen whether sildenafil can increase cardiopulmonary exercise
capacity in healthy athletes operating at sea level. (At present, it
is not banned for use by Olympic athletes.)
Ghofrani says he
doesn't think it would improve lung function in healthy athletes in
normal conditions because their lung and blood vessels are dilated
already, and dilate more with exercise. However, he notes that it
has been shown to improve performance in horses. Racehorses
sometimes suffer lung bleeding and edema after races due to severe
pulmonary hypertension that sildenafil appears to alleviate.
For those who "perform a demanding workout in a condition of
hypoxia," however, Ghofrani says sildenafil might have benefits,
although he says more extensive studies are needed to confirm it. He
does not recommend its use for the majority of people in any
setting, however. For one thing, it seemed to exacerbate headaches
that occur often at high altitudes.
The 12 men and two women
mountain climbers were a median age of 361/2. All had often climbed
to altitudes above 3,500 meters (eight had repeatedly climbed peaks
of 6,000 meters). Half the volunteers took 50 milligrams of
sildenafil and half took a placebo pill on random days. The
researchers measured exercise capacity at the low altitudes while
breathing a mixture of air that contained little oxygen and also at
the high altitude of the Mount Everest base camp, perched at 5,245
meters.
The study reported that the sildenafil reduced high
pressure in the lungs' blood vessels and increased maximum exercise
capacity at sea level and at high altitude. The researchers chose to
do the study at Mount Everest because subjects needed to be exposed
to long-term hypoxia for more than a few days or weeks. The base
camp at Everest's infrastructure also enabled 1 ton of medical
monitoring equipment to be brought in.
The study, done in
early 2003, was funded by the German Research Foundation, a
government agency that provided about two-thirds of the $150,000
cost, while Pfizer Inc., maker of Viagra, paid for the other third.
Since observing the drug's efficacy on the climbers, the
research physicians — all from the University of Giessen Lung Center
— now treat about 300 to 400 previously bedridden patients with
severe pulmonary problems — such as lung fibrosis, obstruction and
cancer — using Viagra, Ghofrani said, with good results. Many
resumed exercise and daily activities or returned to work after
taking the drug daily.
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